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A golfer on the course of the Caracas Country Club.
A golfer on the course of the Caracas Country Club. Photograph: Leslie Mazoch/AP
A golfer on the course of the Caracas Country Club. Photograph: Leslie Mazoch/AP

Diplomatic backswing in Venezuela over stray golf balls on Swiss turf

This article is more than 8 years old

Switzerland’s ambassador, who lives next door to Caracas Country Club, invokes Vienna convention to warn of consequences if someone is hurt or killed

A dispute has teed off between an elite golf club and Switzerland’s ambassador to Venezuela after a banner appeared at her residence warning that balls coming over the fence and injuring or killing someone would violate the Vienna convention on diplomatic relations.

The large placard, located on the residence’s fence near the third of the Caracas Country Club’s 18 holes, begins by explaining that the residence is considered Swiss territory.

“Launching balls into this residence is a danger to whoever is within Swiss territory and a violation of the Vienna convention if a golf ball injures or kills anyone on Swiss soil.”

Ambassador Sabine Ulmann told Reuters she had nothing to say on the matter. Her residence is located in a wealthy area of Caracas alongside the official residences of many other European envoys.

The private Caracas Country Club itself is one of Venezuela’s most elite hangouts. It was derided by late President Hugo Chávez, who described golf as a “bourgeois” sport.

The Venezuelan Federation of Golf said in a statement that it had read the sign with “astonishment”.

“We have no fear whatsoever that we are attacking Swiss territory should a golf ball land in embassy premises,” the statement read. It added that the sign appeared a “strange overreaction”.

Article 30 of the 1961 Vienna convention on diplomatic relations states: “The private residence of a diplomatic agent shall enjoy the same inviolability and protection as the premises of the mission.”

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